How To Tie An Easy Trout Spey Fly | Easy Skagit Fly | Trout Spey Streamer

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 24 лис 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 15

  • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
    @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 років тому +10

    Thank you so much for checking this one out! I got real bored on the road and thought I'd whip up a fly!

  • @1WilliamsBrian
    @1WilliamsBrian 10 місяців тому +1

    Love the pipe cleaner idea...never saw that before. Great fly as well.

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  10 місяців тому +1

      For sure! I can't remember where I saw it first, but it helps a lot keeping those pesky materials away from the front of the fly! Thank you for watching!

  • @philipvankampen3394
    @philipvankampen3394 Рік тому +1

    I've learned a lot from your videos. Thanks for the great content.

  • @dominiqueleblanc2193
    @dominiqueleblanc2193 5 років тому +1

    I use a lit of rabbit fur in my loops too. Even in my atlantic salmon flies. Love the look!

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 років тому +1

      Absolutely! I pretty much include rabbit fur loops in all my flies lol :) Thank you so much for watching!

  • @hankvana2149
    @hankvana2149 5 років тому +1

    Hey Dave! Watching other people tie is a great way to pick-up new techniques - like the way you hang one side of your dubbing loop so it doesn't twist up. Thats a nice dubbing twister you have, it's got some good weight to it - IMHO, most of the twisters on the market are too light and don't pull the thread taught enough to hold some solid/slippery materials (like squirrel tail) - made my own out of some coat-hanger and a 2 ounce egg-sinker. Being old-school (read: 3/0 thread) I was taught to minimize my thread wraps (2 behind to secure, 1 infront to lock followed by a half-hitch to keep everything tight). Still prefer 3/0 for putting down a thread base or building a tapered underbody (quickly - with less than two hundred wraps LOL!) and for stronger dubbing loops. Cheers! Hank

    • @CooperLandingFishingGuide
      @CooperLandingFishingGuide  5 років тому

      For sure! I watch tying videos all the time and they definitely help :) The dubbing spinner I have is the OPST dubbing spinner and it is very helpful for the types of flies I like to tie. You're right on thread wraps. I generally tie quick flies for my guided trips and I really stress "durability" so I can use one fly over and over without them falling apart. I definitely need to refine a bit more with some more precise wraps and less thread turns. Thank you again for checking out the videos!

  • @Brian-tz8ih
    @Brian-tz8ih 5 років тому +2

    Really nice work. . and a great fly.

  • @allenshepherd5962
    @allenshepherd5962 5 років тому +1

    Wow Dave your work is bad ass and I love you rep Alaska our home is the best hope to fish with ya soon

  • @ashtonmakowsky9838
    @ashtonmakowsky9838 2 роки тому

    What size eyes ?

  • @hankvana2149
    @hankvana2149 5 років тому +1

    Hey Dave! Watching other people tie is a great way to pick-up new techniques - like the way you hang one side of your dubbing loop so it doesn't twist up. Thats a nice dubbing twister you have, it's got some good weight to it - IMHO, most of the twisters on the market are too light and don't pull the thread taught enough to hold some solid/slippery materials (like squirrel tail) - made my own out of some coat-hanger and a 2 ounce egg-sinker. Being old-school (read: 3/0 thread) I was taught to minimize my thread wraps (2 behind to secure, 1 infront to lock followed by a half-hitch to keep everything tight). Still prefer 3/0 for putting down a thread base or building a tapered underbody (quickly - with less than two hundred wraps LOL!) and for stronger dubbing loops. Cheers! Hank